On November 22, 1963 President John F.
Kennedy was shot and killed in Dallas, Texas and Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested
for the crime. Other details about the assassin are subject to debate.

In the limited space here, one must defer to the
prevailing opinion which is that Lee Harvey Oswald was a principal player in
the Kennedy assassination, most probably he was at least one of the shooters.
He may have been the only shooter but that determination may never be
conclusively made.

The Warren Commission said that Oswald acted alone.
Verily I say unto X-Files fans, he was the original Lone Gunman. Yet any
student of Court TV can tell you that the investigation was sloppy, the crime
scene "contaminated" and the investigators lacked credentials.

Even had
Oswald lived, could he have been successfully prosecuted? Honchos at the
Justice Department worried about this very issue even while he was in custody,
fearing that the way the prisoner was being handled and his lack of an attorney
would never survive appeal.

What is certain is that the name Lee Harvey
Oswald will always be infamous. Further, he has the dubious honor of being the
first person ever shot and killed on live TV.

Lee Harvey Oswald holding communist
papers. The rifle in his hand and the revolver on his hip are purportedly the
ones that killed Kennedy and Tippit respectively. Oswald claimed to police that
someone superimposed his face and that the picture was a fake.

Let's stick with some generally accepted
facts.

Oswald, born October 18, 1939, in New Orleans, Louisiana, served
in the Marine Corps from 1956 until 1960.

According to the Warren
Report, "Oswald was trained in the use of the M-1 rifle. His practice scores
were not very good, but when his company fired for record on December 21, he
scored 212, 2 points above the score necessary to qualify as a "sharpshooter"
on a marksman/sharpshooter/expert scale."

During his time in the
Marines, he became enamored of the Soviet Union and communist ideology. Because
of his stated intention to renounce his U.S citizenship, Oswald received an
"undesirable discharge" from the Marine Corps Reserve.

Oswald went to
Russia with the original intention of defecting, found the living wasn't too
easy and came home in 1962. He brought with him a wife, Marina (Nikolayevna
Prusakova) Oswald and they would have two children: June Lee Oswald (born Feb.
15, 1961), Audrey Marina Rachel Oswald (born Oct. 20, 1963).

The couple
moved to Texas. While living in there his wife Marina says that he told her he
had shot at former Marine General Edwin Walker. Indeed, a shot was fired into
the ultraconservative Walker's home, narrowly missing him. Oswald told his wife
he did it because Walker was an extremist who deserved to die.

Next Oswald migrates alone to New Orleans and begins
contacting the "Fair Play for Cuba" group in New York. He hands out pamphlets
promoting them, claiming he is a member, which they will later deny.

Both in Texas and Louisiana, he gets fired from jobs for incompetence.
He receives unemployment compensation.

Oswald travels to Mexico City in
late September of 1963. There he contacts the Cuban consulate wanting one visa
to go to Russia with a stopover in Cuba. It was refused. Then he tries the
Soviets for the same routing. They say it could take 3 months for an
answer.

Lee Harvey Oswald returned to Dallas and on Oct. 15, 1963 was
hired by Roy Truly at Texas School Book Depository.

November 22, 1963

Oswald was at work at the Texas School
Book Depository and was seen with a package which contained, he says, "curtain
rods." At lunch time most of the employees rushed outside to catch a glimpse of
President Kennedy's motorcade. But not Lee Harvey Oswald.

At the time
the President passed by, no employee other than Oswald was on the sixth floor.

William L. Brennan one hundred and seven feet from the Depository saw a
three black employees on the fifth floor and a youngish man on the sixth floor
with a rifle. He saw the rifle retreat from view after the shots were fired.
Brennan later gave a description to police - a white male, around thirty,
slender build, height five feet ten inches, weight about 165 pounds. This is
what went out over police radios..

In 1963 it was not a
federal law to kill a U.S. president. Thus jurisdiction rested with local and
State authorities.

The horror story of Dallas convinced Congress that a
remedy was required.

Public Law 89-141, signed on August 28, 1965,
enacted 18 U.S.C. 1751, prohibiting the killing, kidnapping, conspiracy,
assault or attempt to kill or kidnap the President or Vice President.
Jurisdiction was now federal.

Similarly, when Senator Robert F. Kennedy
was killed in June 1968, there was no general Federal statute that prohibited
the assassination of Members of Congress. Public Law 91-644, signed on January
2, 1971, enacted 18 U.S.C. 351, which extended the protection of the Federal
criminal law to Members of Congress, paralleling that extended to the President
and the Vice President.